Decla-Bioskop Aktiengesellschaft production; distributed by Universum-Film Aktiengesellschaft [UFA]. / Produced by Erich Pommer. Scenario by Thea von Harbou; from the [?] play? Die Nibelungen by [?] Friedrich Hebbel? Unit managers, Rudi George and Gustav Püttjer. Production design by Otto Hunte, Erich Kettelhut and Karl Vollbrecht. Dragon design by Karl Vollbrecht. Costume design by Paul Gerd Guderian, Änne Willkomm and Heinrich Umlauff. Properties by Walter Schulze-Mittendorff. Property master by Heinrich Umlauff. Makeup design by Otto Genath. Cinematography by Carl Hoffmann and Günther Rittau. Camera assistant, Günther Anders. Special optical effects by Ernst Kunstmann. Animation by Walther Ruttmann. Still photography by Horst von Harbou. Edited by [?] Paul Falkenberg? Original music score by Gottfried Huppertz. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.37:1 format. / The production was shot at UFA’s Neubabelsberg studios near Berlin, Germany, from 1922 through November 1923. Originally released in Germany as a two-part film shown over two nights; Siegfried (at nine reels) was followed by Kriemhilds Rache. The two films were not released together outside Germany and are usually seen and referred to separately. Siegfried was released in 1924 in the United Kingdom. Siegfried was released in the USA, with intertitles by and reedited by Katharine Hilliker and H.H. Caldwell, on 30 August 1925. Kriemhilds Rache was released as The She-Devil in the United Kingdom in 1925. A synchronized music score was recorded in 1925 using the Phonofilm sound-on-film sound system, which premiered on 23 August 1925 at the Century Theatre in New York, New York. Kriemhilds Rache was released in the USA as Kriemhild’s Revenge in 1928. Siegfrieds Tod was rereleased in Germany with a synchronized music soundtrack in 1932.